Food Freedom for Your Family

With the ever-rising prices of high quality, fresh, organic produce, there’s no time like the present to start high-density gardening. Even if you live in the city and only have a small space, you can use what little space you have to grow your own food and become more self-sufficient. Many home-owners—and even renters with limited space—are growing their own high-density urban gardens and container gardens in backyards and front yards, on balconies, patios, vertical gardens, and even kitchen windowsill gardens.

“We need to celebrate and energize the public to defend the freedom to acquire the food of our choice from the source of our choice. This whole orthodoxy thing we’ve been talking about is militating right now against being able to choose for ourselves the kind of fuel we want for our own bodies. I look at this whole food freedom effort as rectifying something that was missed in the Bill of Rights. We’ve got the right to own a gun, the right to assemble, the right to worship, the right to speak, the right to be secure in our persons without a search warrant. There are all sorts of wonderful rights. But we did not get the right to choose our food.”

—Joel Salatin, libertarian farmer, lecturer, and author

In my own urban desert setting, I’m already growing fruits, veggies, herbs, and even medicinal plants to nourish myself and my family, as well as to cut down on costs and trips to the grocery store. I got started gardening this way a few years ago, and I wish I’d started sooner. I also grow food on my kitchen windowsill, regrowing plants from kitchen scraps that would have otherwise been thrown away. What I can’t regrow, I compost.

One of my next goals towards food freedom for my household is raising backyard chickens. I hope to get started raising chickens this year, but first we have to build an enclosure to house them, keep them cool in our intense desert heat, and keep them safe from predators (including our 3 dogs).

Buying healthy food for a big family like mine is very expensive, but now that our little organic urban garden in the desert is producing more, we are starting to really reap the benefits! Our peach harvest this year was amazing! I still have tons of peaches to use up. Soon our bumper crop of pomegranates will be ready.

My primary goal with backyard gardening is achieving food freedom for my own family, and we’ve already started down the path towards that end. High-density urban gardening is the vehicle we’re using to get us there fast.

Check out this amazing high-density tropical fruit garden in the Arizona desert!

The homeowner in the video above planted her mango trees in her Phoenix, Arizona garden starting in 1992. She has actually succeeded in creating her own microclimate, along with producing so much fruit she gives much of it away to nearby restaurants.

Just imagine having so much fruit you have enough to give it away to restaurants!

Even better, imagine having produced so much food, you can sell it and make a profit, and then your community can also reap the benefits of your labor, while you earn extra income! Like Joel Salatin says, “Backyard gardens and multi-speciation are far more productive per acre.”

Many of us already consciously support local farmers as ethical consumers seeking healthy, natural, organic, fresh food. Why not take this effort even further and actually be the local farmer, even if only in your spare time?

Food Freedom for Your Community, Food and Financial Freedom for You

What if there’s a way to move beyond just achieving autarky (economic independence or self-sufficiency) for individual households? What if there’s more to be gained than just food freedom for a single family?

One of the major advantages of high-density urban gardening is that not only do others in your community benefit by enjoying access to your locally grown, high quality, fresh organic produce—you benefit even more from your efforts and investment. Not only do you and your family have access to the same fresh organic healthy food you grow on your property, butyou also get to know the members of your community—particularly like-minded individuals—and become valuable to them. What’s more, you can have an ethical influence on your local market, and you can earn greater financial freedom! Food freedom for your local community, food and financial freedom for you!

Have I got your attention?

“The meaning of private property in the market society is radically different from what it is under a system of each household’s autarky. Where each household is economically self-sufficient, the privately owned means of production exclusively serve the proprietor. He alone reaps all the benefits derived from their employment.

In the market society, the proprietors of capital and land can enjoy their property only by employing it for the satisfaction of other people’s wants. They must serve the consumers in order to have any advantage from what is their own. The very fact that they own means of production forces them to submit to the wishes of the public.

Ownership is an asset only for those who know how to employ it in the best possible way for the benefit of the consumers.”

Why not capitalize on the space you already occupy by planting a high-density, high-profit urban garden? In doing so, you can also influence your local food market by reshaping it to be more organic, environmentally sustainable, and socially responsible. Why stop at being an ethical consumer when you can also be an ethical marketer? Why not get back to neighbor-to-neighbor food commerce? We can create a whole new ethical food system right where we live, based on our own values and our community’s unique needs.

Benefits of High-Density Urban Gardening

SPIN Farming (Small Plot INtensive farming) is a unique methodology of farming allows people to grow crops in the city in small areas, requires less work (can be done with hand tools), and has higher earning potential by planting high-value crops based on what your own local market demands.

SPIN Farming’s Advantages and Key Characteristics

Production based

Sub-acre in scale

Low capital investment

Entrepreneurially driven

Environmentally friendly

Close to markets

Easy-to-learn

Even those with no gardening or agricultural background can make money growing food right in their own backyard.

By making efficient use of your space, a nominal investment, and a little physical effort—which also doubles as a combination of light exercise and free therapy—you can make a significant step in the right direction of obtaining food freedom for yourself and your family, and towards better health. But you can also make a positive impact in the lives of individuals in your community, while you profit from just doing a good thing!

Why not put your space, your ethics, and your money to work for you? You really can make a difference in the world, starting right in your own backyard.

“If you’re disenfranchised about the way things are in society right now—the Occupy Wallstreet movement and all these things—there’s something you can do that has way more power of an impact than… asking the government to subsidize… Let’s create the world we want to live in. And, that means getting our hands dirty. We all have to get involved. We can protest ’till we’re blue in the face, and the government in most cases isn’t in the position to actually change it for us because they’re just as much of a slave to the system as we are. So, I feel like we need to bring labor, food production, production of goods back to our country and our cities.”

My Libertarian Lifestyle

I'm a woman on a mission to manifest postive holistic changes each day in my own life—however small these changes may seem—because even the slightest of alterations can give rise to strikingly great outcomes in this thing called life. This is the butterfly effect. I am the butterfly.

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"Those of us who are 'disturbers of the universe' are often those whom the universe has treated unkindly and who have decided to fight back, speaking kindness to combat unkindness, hope to overcome defeat, compassion to quell hate, gentleness to counter rage. We are not disturbers of the peace. We are purveyors of peace because we are disturbers of the status quo."

"I am not into electoral politics as a way to change society so I don't think in terms of competing with Republicans or Democrats. I believe that lasting change comes from transforming the hearts and minds of people - freedom comes one person at a time - and the pulling of a lever every four years doesn't have much to do with that process. I believe in grassroots activism to improve the daily realities of people, not in electing politicians to positions of power. A politician has never improved my life, has never made me freer."

—Wendy McElroy, author of several books and co-founder of The Voluntaryist magazine

"Libertarianism is the simple morality we learned as children: don't strike first, don't steal or cheat, keep your promises. If you inadvertently fail to live up to these standards, make it up to the person you've harmed. If someone harms you, you may defend yourself as needed to stop the aggressor and obtain reparations. This simple morality works group-to-group just as it works one-to-one to bring about a peaceful and prosperous world."